The Little Dancer in My Garden
‘The Little Dancer in my Garden’. Nikon D50, 105mm, 1/250 at f/5.6. I’m releasing this image under a Creative Commons Share Alike License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution. Please add…
‘The Little Dancer in my Garden’. Nikon D50, 105mm, 1/250 at f/5.6. I’m releasing this image under a Creative Commons Share Alike License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution. Please add…
Mina Georgescu describes her style of photography as being decorative in nature, but there is so much more to her work than that meets the eye. While a lot of her summery, splendidly-vivid photographs will certainly brighten up any living room, they are also, she says, filled with feelings of longing and melancholy, and gives away a bit of her personality.
Her beautiful ‘Spasmed Heart’ series, one of her more intriguing photo projects, left quite an impression on me. I asked her to tell me more about it, and this is what she replied:
It is a very personal almost intimate project that I started so that I can be able to look at my feelings from the outside. Every piece was and is very cathartic for me as I’m learning to open up to new ways of expression and discovering a new direction with my art. I’m planning on making it a limited edition book.
Mina was born in Romania, but is currently based in Brooklyn, New York. You can buy very affordable prints of her works on her Etsy store.
There are some select photographs from her collection, after the jump.
Richard Brouwer, a native of The Hague in the Netherlands, started driving around a lot of corners in Phoenix, AZ in the year of 2010. It soon, he says, became…
A refreshingly different perspective of the Windy City’s skyline, photographed by Flickr user mreioval. Click here to view a larger version of the image. [via TYWKIWDBI]
Tin Machine
Photographer Ruadh DeLone found his true calling as a photographer, only in the year 2007. His brilliant, photo manipulated portraits, however, belie the fact that he has been at it for a relatively short period of time. His self-portraits have a touch of surrealism to them, which is complemented by the strong undercurrent of humor that bursts through to the surface.
Delon lives in the Netherlands, and works as a freelance photographer for companies and individuals.
More images after the jump.
Check out artist Alex Holder’s lovingly recreated homage to vintage Mills and Boon book covers. The series of self-portraits were shot with her boyfriend Ross Neil, with the assistance of…
Just one of the many beautiful photographs found in the ‘Noise and Dust Through The Viewfinder’ Flickr group. cc licensed flickr photo shared by milesdscott Snip from the description of…
cc licensed flickr photo shared by sicoactiva Escenas de amor entre parejas anónimas (love scenes between anonymous couples). A set on Flickr.
These stark, but beautiful long-exposure photographs were shot at Lake Balaton, Hungary. The images are part of a series by photographer Akos Major.
There are more images after the jump.
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The theme of this former fashion editor and reporter’s weekly photo assignment, almost seems deceptively simple and tepid at first - “Stand on a bench. Make sure it’s Monday. Wear something pretty.” But one glance at the photographs, and we are left stunned at the brilliance of it all. Diverse locations, colorful backdrops, interesting people, and not to mention her effortless and impeccable sense of style, all come together to create one terrific art project.
I abandoned the world of words and appearances and moved to India nine years ago to study yoga and dive into the inner universe. My past and paths now collide in this project – personal façade vs. private interior.
Wardrobes and surrounding spaces are representations and reflections of who we are or who we purport to be. We explore, experiment and express the different aspects that are the ingredients of our individual, whether we are aware of it or not. Be it wild or controlled, we inevitably illustrate a part of ourselves.
The self-portrait series “Once Upon” whimsically plays upon this illustration. With a platform on which to stand, I investigate the host of personalities within, the layers that make up the self, the characters we hide, show, accept and reject, and the role that fashion and design play in molding those characters. My closet is colorful, a menagerie of clothes and accessories amassed on my journeys; though a collection untouched, unworn. Here, it has place and purpose. Headless self-portraits, piled with textures, lend a sense of objectivity, obscurity and freedom from identification.
More images after the jump.